Joseph Addison and General Education: Moral Didactics in Early Eighteenth-Century Britain
Joseph Addison and General Education: Moral Didactics in Early Eighteenth-Century Britain
Author(s): Karl AxelssonSubject(s): Philosophy
Published by: Helsinki University Press
Keywords: J. Addison; history of aesthetics; education; aesthetics
Summary/Abstract: Joseph Addison’s (1672–1719) essays in The Spectator occupy contradictory positions in the history of aesthetics. While they are generally considered central to the institution of aesthetics as a scholarly discipline, their reception has throughout history entailed a strong questioning of their philosophical and scholarly importance. In the following paper, I consider this dual feature as regards reception, and set out to clarify how this has come about. A re-examination of the arguments advanced by Addison makes clear that his role is not that of a philosopher, but that of a public educator. As such he aims to raise the standard of general education of the British ‘middling orders’ in the early eighteenth century, and by using art for didactic purposes he seeks to contribute to the shaping of morally accomplished individuals.
Journal: Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics
- Issue Year: XLVI/2009
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 144-166
- Page Count: 23
- Language: English